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03/29/2005
News groups ask federal
judge in N.C. to open documents in alleged CIA beating
RALEIGH,
N.C. (AP) -- The News & Observer, The Associated Press
and The Washington Post are asking a federal judge to unseal
much of the secret prosecution of a CIA operative from North
Carolina accused of beating an Afghan prisoner who died two
years ago.
The
news organizations filed court papers March 22 asking U.S.
District Court Judge Terrence Boyle to give the public access
to unclassified information in the assault case.
David
Passaro, a former Special Forces soldier recruited by the
CIA, is the first civilian prosecuted on charges of mistreating
a military detainee in the U.S. war on terrorism.
"There's
intense public interest in this case," said Amanda Martin,
the lead lawyer for the news organizations. "The United States
is coming under fire globally for what we're doing. It's important
for the public and the world to see how we respond."
The
U.S. attorney's office declined to comment.
Court
officials have not followed an order Boyle issued a year ago
to disclose unclassified information, the news organizations
said.
The
organizations also contend Boyle didn't follow proper procedures
when he issued two orders sealing records. Interested parties
had no chance to object, and Boyle didn't provide reasons,
the plaintiffs said.
Passaro,
38, is charged with four counts of assault. He is accused
of beating Abdul Wali with his hands, feet and a large flashlight
during a two-day interrogation at a U.S. base in Afghanistan
in June 2003. Wali, who was suspected of rocket attacks on
the base, later died in custody.
Passaro
is a former Fort Bragg Green Beret who went to Afghanistan
under contract with the CIA as part of a paramilitary team
hunting and questioning al-Qaeda suspects and Taliban members.
Prosecutors
said last year that classified information used in the case
could come from the CIA, National Security Agency, Defense
Intelligence Agency, Department of State, National Security
Council and FBI.
The
unauthorized disclosure and uncontrolled dissemination of
information classified as top secret or sensitive would cause
grave damage to the national security of the United States,
U.S. Attorney Frank Whitney's office said in a court filing
at the time.
That
secrecy can't apply to the entire case against Passaro, the
news organizations said in their filing. Even the most difficult
cases involving matters of intense national significance can
give way to a certain amount of public access and scrutiny,
they said.
It
is important for the public to see how justice unfolds to
accept the end result, Martin said.
The
petition quotes an observation by former Chief Justice Warren
Burger about the importance of openness. In a 1980 Supreme
Court ruling he wrote, "People in an open society do not demand
infallibility from their institutions, but it is difficult
for them to accept what they are prohibited from observing."
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